The number of countries willing to follow Australia's lead is increasing.Sanchez: "Our children are exposed to disparities that should not be...
Spain has also decided to ban social networks for children under the age of 16
The number of countries ready to follow in Australia's footsteps is growing.Sanchez: "Our children are exposed to an environment that they don't have to explore on their own...".Portugal is also ready to squeeze
Spain and Portugal also plan to ban under-16s from accessing social media, after Australia became the first country in the world to ban access to such platforms in December, joining a number of countries such as England and France in taking tougher stances on the so-called digital age of access to social media platforms.Governments and regulators around the world are also assessing the impact of children in front of screens on their development and mental health.
"Our children are in a place where they should never return alone ... We will not accept it anymore - said Safe of the Digital Wild Leaders to implement similar measures."We want them to be strict measures for the Bm Land tool, "Hot Sanchez added, and sinned that sparnish with five other European employees in a plural social council and the first regulation and the effective details and the council of the previous regulation.kubent month.
In recent months, the Spanish prime minister has been one of the few left-wing leaders to attack social media for the first time, calling them a "techno-caste" who should be held responsible for the "poisoning of society" by algorithms.
The bill that Spain will present next week focuses on the criminal load of social media managers: "We will change the Spanish law so that the platform managers are responsible for the many violations that occur on their platforms. This means that the presidents of these technical systems will be subject to criminal charges if they do not remove hateful or illegal content," explained Sánchez.
The European Union now requires large websites to be responsible for their broadcasts through the Digital Services Act (DSA).The application of this regulation has already led to the payment of the first fine imposed on X, 120 million euros if it fails to comply with its disclosure obligations regarding advertising databases.The initiative proposed by the Spanish president is to attach legal responsibility for these violations to the great tech executives, without explaining exactly how.In addition, government spokeswoman Minister Elma Saiz said, "Centres will implement effective systems that go beyond simple formal proof to verify the age of users, ensuring that there are real and effective barriers."
One of the proposed measures is a system to track hate speech online.From a legal perspective, this ban on the use of social media by children under the age of 16 will be implemented as part of an amendment to the current bill on the digital protection of minors, which is currently being discussed in the Spanish Parliament.
A similar bill restricting access to social media for children under the age of 16 was introduced in Portugal two days ago."According to this law, the digital age for access to sites, services, games and applications is set at 16 years," said the document written by representatives of the right-wing ruling party.Young people between the ages of 13 and 16 can access social media only with the permission of parents, and show age verification compatible with the software used by the Portuguese authorities.The proposal also shows that the facilities must be made.According to the signature of the representatives in Portuguese, "special information and recent scientific data" show that the use of these services before the age of 16 can affect the child's social and intellectual development.
The debate over embracing the digital age has intensified in Europe after Australia in December became the first country to ban social media for under-16s.Last week, the French parliament approved a bill banning social media for children under the age of 15, a government-backed teen health measure.Along with France, Denmark, Greece and Spain are also seeking to extend the ban to the entire European Union.
